HTML Training Classes in Kansas City, Missouri
Learn HTML in Kansas City, Missouri and surrounding areas via our hands-on, expert led courses. All of our classes either are offered on an onsite, online or public instructor led basis. Here is a list of our current HTML related training offerings in Kansas City, Missouri: HTML Training
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- RHCSA EXAM PREP 
 17 November, 2025 - 21 November, 2025
- Fast Track to Java 17 and OO Development 
 8 December, 2025 - 12 December, 2025
- ASP.NET Core MVC (VS2022) 
 24 November, 2025 - 25 November, 2025
- Introduction to Spring 6, Spring Boot 3, and Spring REST 
 15 December, 2025 - 19 December, 2025
- RED HAT ENTERPRISE LINUX SYSTEMS ADMIN II 
 8 December, 2025 - 11 December, 2025
- See our complete public course listing 
Blog Entries publications that: entertain, make you think, offer insight
Below are two pdf's which discuss and outline the Java Message Service, JMS, tutorial.
	 One Hour Java Messaging Service Tutorial
One Hour Java Messaging Service Tutorial
	 Advanced One Hour Java Messaging Service Tutorial
Advanced One Hour Java Messaging Service Tutorial
	
	 
Voice recordings are useful at any point in time. If you want to save a lecture (or presentation) that you are attending, or record a voiceover for a project, the iPhone can be your solution. You don’t have to use an old tape recorder, or a standalone recorder. The iPhone’s fantastic technology records high quality voice recordings on demand, whenever you need it.
To get started, look for an application named “Voice Memos.” Most likely, this particular application is found in your Utilities category by default. Once you open it up, you are greeted by a large microphone, indicating you are in the correct application. When you want to start recording, simply tap on the large red button in the bottom left, and you are on your way to begin recording. What is important about recording voices on this application to the highest degree of quality, ensure that your meter in the bottom is within the middle range; with the pointer in the red zone, your recording will be awfully loud, while otherwise, it will be too quiet. Finished recording? Simply tap on the square button, and you have your recording.
What can you do with these recordings? Once you have finished recording, you are able to now share this recording through email or even in a text message; email it to yourself so you can save it on your computer, and listen to it later, or start editing it to put into a movie production, or text it to a friend for their needs.
It’s befuddling when you think about how many ways there are to communicate in 2013. I’d say there are too many new ways to communicate – social media, phone, Skype, instant message, text message, email, it goes on and on. But do any of them outweigh the power of a good old-fashioned face-to-face meeting? Most business executives would argue no. Nothing can replace a face-to-face meeting, at least yet.
That said, face-to-face meetings are without question the most expensive kind, given the travel costs required to make them a reality, and companies around the globe have been trying to make them more financially manageable ever since the recession set in. But recession or no, face-to-face meetings are rarely in the budget cards for small businesses. So how can entrepreneurs around the globe get more out of their virtual meetings while ensuring any physical meeting is worth the cost?
The original article was posted by Michael Veksler on Quora
A very well known fact is that code is written once, but it is read many times. This means that a good developer, in any language, writes understandable code. Writing understandable code is not always easy, and takes practice. The difficult part, is that you read what you have just written and it makes perfect sense to you, but a year later you curse the idiot who wrote that code, without realizing it was you.
The best way to learn how to write readable code, is to collaborate with others. Other people will spot badly written code, faster than the author. There are plenty of open source projects, which you can start working on and learn from more experienced programmers.
Readability is a tricky thing, and involves several aspects:
- Never surprise the reader of your code, even if it will be you a year from now. For example, don’t call a function max() when sometimes it returns the minimum().
- Be consistent, and use the same conventions throughout your code. Not only the same naming conventions, and the same indentation, but also the same semantics. If, for example, most of your functions return a negative value for failure and a positive for success, then avoid writing functions that return false on failure.
- Write short functions, so that they fit your screen. I hate strict rules, since there are always exceptions, but from my experience you can almost always write functions short enough to fit your screen. Throughout my carrier I had only a few cases when writing short function was either impossible, or resulted in much worse code.
- Use descriptive names, unless this is one of those standard names, such as i or it in a loop. Don’t make the name too long, on one hand, but don’t make it cryptic on the other.
- Define function names by what they do, not by what they are used for or how they are implemented. If you name functions by what they do, then code will be much more readable, and much more reusable.
- Avoid global state as much as you can. Global variables, and sometimes attributes in an object, are difficult to reason about. It is difficult to understand why such global state changes, when it does, and requires a lot of debugging.
- As Donald Knuth wrote in one of his papers: “Early optimization is the root of all evil”. Meaning, write for readability first, optimize later.
- The opposite of the previous rule: if you have an alternative which has similar readability, but lower complexity, use it. Also, if you have a polynomial alternative to your exponential algorithm (when N > 10), you should use that.
Use standard library whenever it makes your code shorter; don’t implement everything yourself. External libraries are more problematic, and are both good and bad. With external libraries, such as boost, you can save a lot of work. You should really learn boost, with the added benefit that the c++ standard gets more and more form boost. The negative with boost is that it changes over time, and code that works today may break tomorrow. Also, if you try to combine a third-party library, which uses a specific version of boost, it may break with your current version of boost. This does not happen often, but it may.
	Don’t blindly use C++ standard library without understanding what it does - learn it. You look at std::vector::push_back()std::mapstd::unordered_map
	Never call newdeletestd::make_uniqueusique_ptr, shared_ptr, weak_ptr
Every time you look at a new class or function, in boost or in std, ask yourself “why is it done this way and not another?”. It will help you understand trade-offs in software development, and will help you use the right tool for your job. Don’t be afraid to peek into the source of boost and the std, and try to understand how it works. It will not be easy, at first, but you will learn a lot.
Know what complexity is, and how to calculate it. Avoid exponential and cubic complexity, unless you know your N is very low, and will always stay low.
Learn data-structures and algorithms, and know them. Many people think that it is simply a wasted time, since all data-structures are implemented in standard libraries, but this is not as simple as that. By understanding data-structures, you’d find it easier to pick the right library. Also, believe it or now, after 25 years since I learned data-structures, I still use this knowledge. Half a year ago I had to implemented a hash table, since I needed fast serialization capability which the available libraries did not provide. Now I am writing some sort of interval-btree, since using std::map, for the same purpose, turned up to be very very slow, and the performance bottleneck of my code.
Notice that you can’t just find interval-btree on Wikipedia, or stack-overflow. The closest thing you can find is Interval tree, but it has some performance drawbacks. So how can you implement an interval-btree, unless you know what a btree is and what an interval-tree is? I strongly suggest, again, that you learn and remember data-structures.
These are the most important things, which will make you a better programmer. The other things will follow.
Tech Life in Missouri
| Company Name | City | Industry | Secondary Industry | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Patriot Coal Corporation | Saint Louis | Agriculture and Mining | Mining and Quarrying | 
| Solutia Inc. | Saint Louis | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals | 
| Monsanto Company | Saint Louis | Agriculture and Mining | Agriculture and Mining Other | 
| Kansas City Power and Light Company | Kansas City | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities | 
| The Laclede Group, Inc. | Saint Louis | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities | 
| Peabody Energy Corporation | Saint Louis | Agriculture and Mining | Mining and Quarrying | 
| Emerson Electric Company | Saint Louis | Manufacturing | Tools, Hardware and Light Machinery | 
| Energizer Holdings, Inc. | Saint Louis | Manufacturing | Manufacturing Other | 
| Centene Corporation | Saint Louis | Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals and Biotech | Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals, and Biotech Other | 
| Express Scripts | Saint Louis | Healthcare, Pharmaceuticals and Biotech | Pharmaceuticals | 
| Reinsurance Group of America, Incorporated | Chesterfield | Financial Services | Insurance and Risk Management | 
| Ameren Corporation | Saint Louis | Energy and Utilities | Gas and Electric Utilities | 
| DST Systems, Inc. | Kansas City | Computers and Electronics | Networking Equipment and Systems | 
| Inergy, L.P. | Kansas City | Energy and Utilities | Alternative Energy Sources | 
| Leggett and Platt, Incorporated | Carthage | Manufacturing | Furniture Manufacturing | 
| Cerner Corporation | Kansas City | Software and Internet | Software | 
| O'Reilly Automotive, Inc. | Springfield | Retail | Automobile Parts Stores | 
| AMC Theatres | Kansas City | Media and Entertainment | Motion Picture Exhibitors | 
| Sigma-Aldrich Corporation | Saint Louis | Manufacturing | Chemicals and Petrochemicals | 
| HandR Block | Kansas City | Financial Services | Securities Agents and Brokers | 
| Graybar Services, Inc. | Saint Louis | Wholesale and Distribution | Wholesale and Distribution Other | 
| Edward Jones | Saint Louis | Financial Services | Personal Financial Planning and Private Banking | 
| Arch Coal, Inc. | Saint Louis | Energy and Utilities | Alternative Energy Sources | 
| Brown Shoe Company, Inc. | Saint Louis | Retail | Clothing and Shoes Stores | 
| Ralcorp Holdings, Inc. | Saint Louis | Manufacturing | Food and Dairy Product Manufacturing and Packaging | 
training details locations, tags and why hsg
The Hartmann Software Group understands these issues and addresses them and others during any training engagement. Although no IT educational institution can guarantee career or application development success, HSG can get you closer to your goals at a far faster rate than self paced learning and, arguably, than the competition. Here are the reasons why we are so successful at teaching:
- Learn from the experts.  
                                - We have provided software development and other IT related training to many major corporations in Missouri since 2002.
- Our educators have years of consulting and training experience; moreover, we require each trainer to have cross-discipline expertise i.e. be Java and .NET experts so that you get a broad understanding of how industry wide experts work and think.
 
- Discover tips and tricks about HTML programming
- Get your questions answered by easy to follow, organized HTML experts
- Get up to speed with vital HTML programming tools
- Save on travel expenses by learning right from your desk or home office. Enroll in an online instructor led class. Nearly all of our classes are offered in this way.
- Prepare to hit the ground running for a new job or a new position
- See the big picture and have the instructor fill in the gaps
- We teach with sophisticated learning tools and provide excellent supporting course material
- Books and course material are provided in advance
- Get a book of your choice from the HSG Store as a gift from us when you register for a class
- Gain a lot of practical skills in a short amount of time
- We teach what we know…software
- We care…














